l .

Tom performing lifetracks at the Chill, 2006

 

 

Quiet Voices
Late at Tate Britain
London
January 8th 2010

My old friend and sometime collaborator John Rixon got in touch in the early part of 2009 to let me know about a gig at the Tate Gallery that he'd been invited to curate. He was justifiably excited; being given a space like the Tate Gallery to put on what you want to is a fantastic opportunity!

I was really looking forward to this, and as the time approached I had a conversation with John where we agreed that it'd be best if I reverted back to a 35mm slide show for this event. I was more than happy to do this; after all when I started playing at the Chill back in 2000 I kind of pioneered the 'less is more' approach. It seemed to me that everyone else was projecting manic, speedy imagery with all of the new software that was being released at the time and I wanted something that reflected what my music was attempting to convey - peace and tranquility. I've got a big library of photographic work and it seems a shame not to share it!

Anyway, fast forward to the event itself... we'd been asked to get there early on in the day for a health and safety briefing. In stark contrast to when I played here before back at the end of 2006, this side of things was totally over the top. It seems that these days, we, as a country have adopted the 'sue me, sue you' mentality from our American cousins, so just to be on the safe side, we were subjected to a 20 minute preamble where Fire Exit signs were explained. It's all synonymous with the whole nanny state that we've sleepwalked into.

I managed to escape halfway through and went to see what was going on in my space. I was in a similar place to the 2006 gig, beautiful vaulted ceilings which produced a fantastic ambience. The Tate had organised 4 Kodak EktaPro's with two pro-dissolve units; I'd organised 4 carousels-worth of work and we set the dissolve times to the maximum 10 seconds so you had a lovely bleed-in from each picture to the next. It worked really well.

The only downside was that [due to draconian health and safety laws] we couldn't turn the lighting down sufficiently low enough, so that some of the less contrasty work was nigh-on invisible. However, it didn't seem to deter people from standing and gazing at the constantly shifting imagery!

And the soundsystem wasn't bad either... there was a certain amount of audio-bleed from the other end of the duveen where John and Simon had their work installed, but I made sure that my soundscapes were pitched to what was happening at the other end of the gallery.

This time around, I made sure that I took along a supply of business cards and also some CD and vinyl stock. I made a good few fresh connections on the night, and also managed to shift a load of CDs too!

But I've got to say that the best thing in my opinion was the fact that John managed to pull together some old skool Big Chillers. It really was magical to see so many old faces; artists and mates that I've met throughout my career with the Big Chill that had all come together to make this the night it turned out to be... a really special gig.

I'd just like to reitterate my thanks to John, to Ade for putting this on, and also Matt for his help with the slide projectors... not forgetting Ped for wading in and helping me sort out the slides that I'd managed to put into the carousels the wrong way round!

Click here to return to the Scrapbook